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Is the role model, as a role, played out? It’s a term rap lyricist, actress and writer Toni Blackman says she often debates with her peers. And while the Beyonces and Rihannas of the world are almost guaranteed to dominate the spotlight, Blackman says the question presents an interesting opportunity, and a chance to move women like herself out of the shadows and into a place where young girls — like the 20,000 Girl Scouts who converged on Washington, D.C., for the organization’s 100th anniversary last weekend — can be inspired.

“We live in this celebrity culture where almost anybody can become famous. However, too often, the people who really need to be in the public eye are not there because they’re too busy doing meaningful work. So girls and women miss out on opportunities for inspiration,” Blackman says.

Through her work as the U.S. Hip Hop Cultural Envoy for the U.S. Department of State, Blackman tackles issues of bullying and self-image through hip hop and spoken word performances, an approach she says she was motivated to employ by her own mentors — like Deborah Menkart, who planted the seeds on how to help refugee girls and women find their own voice, and her grandmother, who she says taught her to take pride in her dark complexion.

But growing up, Blackman says that although she was surrounded by good, loving people, she had little access to women who weren’t afraid to dream big. “I think about my life and some of my friends, and if we had known of women who were running multimillion-dollar businesses, we might have had more inspiration to become business owners,” she says. “We always had business ideas, but we weren’t able to execute them until later in life.”

Helping young girls get a head start is something Blackman says she’s been focused on over the last two years, and she’s been encouraging fellow hip hop artists to do the same.

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article courtesy of TheHuffingtonPost.com

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